Bringing Up Bill 169
theodp writes "Over at the WSJ, Bill Gates Sr. describes what it took to turn an unruly 12-year-old into Microsoft's founder and the world's richest man. This included throwing a glass of cold water in the boy's face when he was having a particularly heated argument with his mother at the dinner table. 'He was nasty,' says Libby Armintrout, Bill's younger sister. 'I'm at war with my parents over who is in control,' Bill Gates recalls telling a therapist, who told his parents that their son would ultimately win the battle for independence, and their best course of action was to ease up on him. The rest, as they say, is history. The accompanying Gates Family Album is also worth a look."
"at war with my parents over who is in control" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:"at war with my parents over who is in control" (Score:5, Interesting)
This is kind of tabloid territory here, but I am reminded of numerous accounts of "Bill Rage" in MS meetings. If you wanted to pitch an idea, you'd better be able to take on serious verbal abuse, sometimes simply because he didn't like the "name of one of the features" or because he didn't like some other minute aspect.
There have been so many reports of this over the years that you could really see a pattern forming around his behavior, and people around him had to "adapt" to his eccentricities.
For the most part, however, these outbursts didn't occur outside of closed doors. You don't see any videos on youtube with gates losing it in front of a camera.
(not even in the pie incident, really)
Re:"at war with my parents over who is in control" (Score:4, Insightful)
If you wanted to pitch an idea, you'd better be able to take on serious verbal abuse, sometimes simply because he didn't like the "name of one of the features" or because he didn't like some other minute aspect.
Yeah, and their stuff sucked a lot less back then, too. You wouldn't have seen Vista on Bill's watch; it took a Ballmer for that to happen.
When a company no longer has someone at the top who is willing to call bullshit for what it is, that company is headed downhill.
Re:"at war with my parents over who is in control" (Score:5, Insightful)
WinME happened on his watch. So did MS Bob, Clippy, and every internet search initiative you can think of.
Re: (Score:2)
IIRC, MS Bob was designed by Bill's wife, so I think we can cut him some slack on that one. She's the one person Bill wouldn't challenge ;)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
MS Bob was managed by his girlfriend who he later married [wikipedia.org].
And actually the Search Doggy [toastytech.com] from Windows XP came from Bob
http://toastytech.com/guis/bob.html [toastytech.com]
Search Doggy was a very good dog, he always found my files when I lost them.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
I agree with your sentiment on running a "tried, proven and fixed system" but Windows ME was anything but... it was still based on the broken hybrid DOS/Windows model (VXDs, cooperative multitasking... yay!), whereas Windows 2000 was essentially Windows NT 5.
If you really wanted to stick with a "proven" platform you could have stuck with NT 4 SP 6a :)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
cooperative multitasking
Huh? Windows used pre-emptive multitasking since Win95. Of course, you could still disable interrupts if you wanted to...
Re: (Score:2)
I still consider Win 95's model of "oh god bad stuff happened throw up a blue screen and tell the user to restart" cooperative, when compared to NT 4's preemptive style. At least in NT 4 when an app crashed and burned task manager could usually kill it...
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Mod +1 funny for obvious reasons.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:"at war with my parents over who is in control" (Score:4, Insightful)
Was missing out on the Internet strategic?
(and I cringe as I write this... Imagine an internet/web based on MS software...)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You realize he headed the Vista project?
Re:"at war with my parents over who is in control" (Score:5, Informative)
Sorry?
VisualBasic, Windows 95, 98, ME, ActiveDirectory, Bob, Clippy, win32 API, functionally useless APIs, forced backwards compatibility, intrusive and dangerous default system services, Internet Explorer, MSHTML, and on and on goes the list of half-baked, broken, and abusive technologies which we've had to work around for the past two decades. Policy at MS has always been "we're doing what we want, and don't care about you" with regard to their products; they're brazen, like an undisciplined IT worker is in making system changes.
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly. Look at what happened with Apple when Steve wasn't there. (who apparently is even more of a tyrant than Bill)
As someone who worked at Rogers told me once, "never underestimate the power of a megalomaniac billionaire for getting things done".
Re: (Score:2)
Steve Jobs is known for exactly the same kinds of tantrums. Ballmer too. Maybe that's just the kind of person you have to be to dominate an industry?
Perfect Qualities For.... (Score:5, Funny)
It sounds like the perfect qualities and personality for conquering an industry. Maybe we should be glad that he stayed out of law, or we could have ended up with a real control-freak president here.
Re:Perfect Qualities For.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not sure whether to mod you insightful or funny, so I'll just post... I really think this is quite a valid opinion.
I'm probably the first to despise Bill for his tactics with regards to computers, but I can only imagine what it'd be like if he was a politician. Makes me kind of thankful that he stayed with stealing other people's software...
Re: (Score:2)
If he was a politician, he probably wouldn't get very far because of his looks. Look at Ross Perot and Dennis Kucinich.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Please, don't go giving him ideas.
Re: (Score:2)
You do know that Bill has been cosying-up to Tony Blair, getting himself knighted, and been popularising his image with youth by getting on stage at charity music events etc., just like politians attempt to do now and then, right?
Re:Perfect Qualities For.... (Score:4, Insightful)
If a control freak was president he would be very unhappy. Being president there is way to much entropy and with the checks and balances you do not have full control. So you need to get congress to go along with your ideas, the same with the judical system, and many of them do not like the fact that you are in power and will fight you every step of the way. Then you have a general population who will determine if you get an other term or not. Or to replace the people in congress with the guys who hate you. A controll freak would not be happy there as they have little control of what they do.
Re: (Score:2)
thats why they are not presidents, but the powers behind the throne, so to speak...
Re: (Score:2)
The concern should not be that someone like Bill - a power hungry control freak - become President. For someone like Bill, every step up to the Presidency would be a stepping stone to the Presidency.
And, in all likelihood, the Presidency would be a stepping stone to more power, in and of itself. The office of President wouldn't be important to him; sure, it's more prestige than whatever it was he did before, but it's not the true power he's looking for (not on its own, at least).
Back-room deals with industr
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I can't believe now we're resorting to personal attacks on /.
Even if it's Bill... it's...
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Still not "news for nerds" or "stuff that matters"?
How is this relevant?
Especially since Bill Gates is semi-retired.
Re:"at war with my parents over who is in control" (Score:4, Interesting)
Like him or not, Bill Gates is pretty high up in the list of people who had a large effect on the whole computing industry.As a nerd, and a parent, I'm interested in what makes him tick, so I don't make the same mistakes with my kids :)
His parents must do all right at christmas/birthdays/mothers day/fathers day/etc though... maybe there's something in that.
I wonder if, deep down, Microsoft Windows was just a way to rebel against his parents? eg "Fine then! I'm going to go and start a computing empire and make my products suckier and suckier and by the time people notice it will be too late for them to use anything else. And it be all your fault! :p :p :p"
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Like him or not, Bill Gates is pretty high up in the list of people who had a large effect on the whole computing industry.
I have to agree. The issue I have is how much warping and damage did he cause the computing industry by his desire to win and maintain his monopoly at all costs. I've heard the arguments before that if Mr. Gates hadn't been around that Steve Jobs would have been running the show. That is not an unreasonable argument. My belief is that had CP/M been chosen for the first IBM PC, we would have had a more inclusive community, and more competition based on merits of the software and not on back room deals with c
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The computing industry is more than just end user desktops, you know.
Re: (Score:2)
I can't believe now we're resorting to personal attacks on /.
You must be new here...
My take on it (Score:5, Insightful)
He was a smart guy. He scored a near perfect on his SAT, and went into Harvard.
Re: (Score:3)
Those last two sentences... one can often have nothing to do with the other.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:My take on it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Either way, these are just skills that can be developed. Intelligence is nothing mysterious.
Re: (Score:2)
high functioning Aspergers .. (Score:2)
That an interesting point, some others have suggested that Gates displays the symptoms [break.com] of an Aspergers sufferer.
Re: (Score:2)
Either way, these are just skills that can be developed. Intelligence is nothing mysterious.
This is largely false. People have a "hard limit" to the level of insight th
Re: (Score:2)
i man
Re: (Score:2)
This is largely false. People have a "hard limit" to the level of insight they are able to attain, particularly with respect to connections between multiple disciplines. This may be overcome to some extent through conditioning, but some people are simply capable of deeper thought than others.
No, it is actually true. Do the research, I have. When it comes to the brain, there is no such thing as 'natural' talent that makes it possible for one person to achieve things other people can't. You are probably basing your statement on your perception of the world around you, and what others around you tend to believe, which means it is based on anecdotal evidence and hearsay.
I can go farther than that. If you want to expand your brain power, or accomplish something with your brain, I can tell you
Re: (Score:2)
I can go farther than that. If you want to expand your brain power, or accomplish something with your brain, I can tell you how to achieve it.
Do tell. I've been interested in this very thing (natural limits of intelligence) for a while. I personally believe that everyone more or less has the same potential for learning and comprehension, but that personality and upbringing tend to either curb or enhance the individual's ability. Essentially if you're told you can't do something often enough as a young'un
Re: (Score:2)
The first thing is to define your goal. Saying, "I want to achieve my intelligence" is kind of an empty goal, what do you really want to do? Increase your ability to notice things? Increase your score on the IQ test? Impress your friends with how intelligent you are? These are all different goals and you will go about achieving each one differently.
So since you d
Re: (Score:2)
What is it that you actually want to do? You haven't even asked for anything real.
Re:My take on it (Score:4, Insightful)
This further lends itself to Microsoft' philosphy as a whole. They bought up or destroyed all competition with their monopoly wherever they could so there was no competition. Now that open source and Apple and Google are in town and ganging up on them, they are not having such a good time of it.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
... and while at Harvard, he realized that EVERYONE there was smart and scored a near perfect score on their SAT's. Making him average. So he dropped out.
Given that not everyone from Harvard ends up earning a dew dozen billion dollars eventually, I'd say that he did prove his point by dropping out, no?
Re: (Score:2)
Making money is not proof of intelligence. Berny Maddof made billions. Is he as smart as Bill Gates? Or are they both thieves?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Dude he dropped out of Harvard to start Microsoft.... him and Paul Allen saw the Altair as "it's go time." It wasn't some three year old pouting because he was suddenly in the presence of people who were also smart (although being smart isn't necessarily the key to getting into an Ivy league school...)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm sorry - I didn't know you were in Bill Gates's head. It's incredible that you know that for sure. Obviously you do, otherwise you wouldn't phrase it as fact.
Ass.
Re: (Score:2)
Not that smart... just a thief who can see others brilliance and mimic it.
PR (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
I know the PR company, Ballmer and associates (Score:2)
Do you really think they need a PR Company to humanise BillG face? When you have THIS replacing you at the company, you will look good compared to him no matter what you have done.
http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/exec/steve/ [microsoft.com]
Similar thing happened to SJobs, when he got fired from the company he founded. Ask the people who were around him in 1980s, he wasn't _that_ loved. Hugely respected, admired but not liked. Of course, BillG wasn't fired, that is one difference. IMHO, if he tried to make a NeXT like rev
Honestly, I wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess the point of this would be (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
I guess ultimately Bill Gates, is just this guy, you know?
Good to hear it from his brain care specialist.
Ah The Power of the Celebrity (Score:5, Interesting)
"Celebrity is the Dynamic Quality that primitive social patterns once used to organize themselves. That gives celebrity a new importance.
None of this celebrity has any meaning in a subject-object universe. But in a value-structured universe, celebrity comes roaring to the front of reality as a huge fundamental parameter. It becomes an organizing force of the whole social level of evolution. Without this celebrity force, advanced complex human societies might be impossible. Even simple ones.
It was crazy. People going over Niagara Falls in a barrel and killing themselves just for the celebrity of it. Assassins murdering for it. Maybe the real reason nations declared war was to increase their celebrity status. You could organize an anthropology around it.
Even a policeman's uniform is a kind of celebrity device so that you will do what he says without questioning him. Without celebrity nobody would take orders from anybody and there would be no way you could get society to work.
Money and celebrity are fame and fortune, traditionally paired as twin forces in the Dynamic generation of social value. Both fame and fortune are huge Dynamic parameters that give society its shape and meaning. We have whole departments of universities, in fact, whole colleges, devoted to the study of economics, that is fortune, but what do we have that is similarly devoted to the study of fame? What exactly is the mechanism by which the cultures controls the shapes of the mirrors that produce all these different images of celebrity? Would analysis of that mirror-changing force enable the resolution of ethnic conflicts? Phaedrus didn't know..." - Lila, Chapter 20, Robert M. Pirsig.
Re: (Score:2)
Congratulations on citing a pretentious anthropology text, but you really could have made your point without it.
Still, Mommy got him going (Score:5, Interesting)
Some of us remember when M$ was just producing crappy CP/M-80 compilers and assemblers. How crappy? It took me years to get out of the habit of writing "&array_name[0]", instead of "array_name", since C80 didn't use the latter correctly. (I understand that about version 6 of the M$-Windows "C" compiler they finally got it working; 5 didn't handle "if ((do_input) && inb())" correctly, since it would do the inb() first, at least in some circumstances).
After IBM was stupidly (as it turned out) snubbed by Digital Research, Mary Gates happened to meet an IBM exec at the club, and when he mentioned that they were looking for an operating system for little computers, she made the connection between him and Bill.
We all have her to "thank", first for bearing him, then for putting him into position to bully us.
Softcard introduced Bill to IBM (Score:3, Insightful)
The IBM people saw that business people using the Apple II normally had a Z80 Softcard from Microsoft with CP/M and several Microsoft tools and applications. They decided that their machine should have this as well.
In their meeting with Bill, they were shocked to find out that CP/M belonged to a different company. Bill Gates immediately called Gary Kindall and told him he was sending some very important people to talk to him. The IBM people went to California and when things didn't work out they came back t
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
ALL early PC products had problems. The early adopters were fairly forgiving of such because they knew they were trading time for money (cheaper machine). Early Apple II's leaked so much radiation that they couldn't legally call them "comsumer products". The first TRS-80's crashed quite often. Etc.
Another Excerpt: Young Bill's First Demo Disaster (Score:2)
Why Bill Gates stays so calm [youtube.com] on stage whenever Microsoft's product demos run into trouble: He had plenty of experience with such things, starting at an early age [techflash.com]. Young 'Trey' managed to persuade employees of the City of Seattle to come to his parents' house for a demo of his and Paul Allen's Traf-O-Data [wikipedia.org] software, but the first live demo of his system failed. So how did Bill react? He ran into the kitchen, shouting on the way, 'Mom! Mom! Come and tell them that it worked!'
it figures :) (Score:2)
It's a debatable point as to whether Gates ever actually grew up. He is famious for yelling "That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard [technology-digital.com]" at his underlings. It would expalin his total lack of a moral compass in his business dealings.
Re: (Score:2)
I also wonder if Bill ever grew up.
Re: (Score:2)
Or a combination of noscript and a customized userContent.css file.
Alright....... (Score:2)
In addition to the freaking picture of MS founder(s) laying on the table next to amiga now I have the freaking picture of not well-aged father of the MS founder and the other MS founder.. now what? is this news for nerds site? sorry, no
Re: (Score:2)
What picture of him laying next to an amiga? If you are talking about the teen beat spread, there were no amigas around then as the picture was from like 1983 or something.
Yet another puff piece... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Yep.
It's like saying (though to a lesser degree) that Hitler was a nice guy: he enjoyed art, architecture, and beauty. He was a bit of a nerd, and looked down on - just your average nerd, not the high-functioning type. And he just wanted to be accepted; truly, he was just misunderstood!
(Duly note the sarcasm.)
Malcolm Gladwell's "Outliers" (Score:2, Insightful)
Gladwell's latest book "Outliers" has a chapter about Bill Gates. Overall the book is about how a certain very few people are able to have outrageous success. The standard American story of this is that through hard work and determination that anything is possible. Gladwell points out that in most cases it requires a lot more than grit and determination it also requires being in exactly the right place at exactly the right time with exactly the right skills. (I know... duh. Right? But it is a good boo
Outliers (Score:3, Interesting)
He was an asshole then... (Score:2)
and guess what? He's an asshole now.
This reminds me of the scene in the current "Crank 2 - High Voltage" movie where the action stops at one point and we're treated to a replay of a video of Chev Chelios as a young boy being brought on a TV show because he's such a rotter even at that age.
Re: (Score:2)
He's a rich asshole now. Subtle but important difference, and off the top of my head can't think of many rich business people who aren't.
Re:Eeeep! (Score:5, Funny)
Isn't he dreamy?
Re:Eeeep! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:How is this news? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
An article on the turbulent teen years of a guy that's retired sort of fails the "news" part.
Re: (Score:2)
I gave up on Microsoft after Win2K, and haven't looked back. Doing just fine, thanks.
Re:How is this news? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
I agree with your take on why this is interesting, but I especially think the "our enemy" remark hits the nail on the head. If this was about Larry Ellison, it probably wouldn't have made it in. If the article were about Steve Jobs, it would have made it in for completely different reasons.
Yes, he's very influential, but it's his *controversial* nature that makes this especially interesting.
Re:How is this news? (Score:5, Informative)
I have much less respect for Larry Ellison than I do for Bill Gates. Gates might have been difficult to handle behind closed doors, but Ellison is just outright arrogant all over, from ignoring San Jose Airport's landing restrictions (and eventually getting a waiver for them) to withdrawing a $115 million pledge to Harvard University just because they changed presidents. I have also heard from people who have worked at Oracle that Ellison is at least as difficult to work with as Steve Ballmer, and that Oracle's management cares much less about the technology than about the money even when compared to Microsoft.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Personally, I'd replace the word "respect" with "acknowledgment". The MS/WinTel strategies (if you can call them that) were effectively an implementation of organized crime behavior. It's been a while since it's been in the news, so people forget just how severe, and numerous, the allegations were.
Here's a brief reminder [wikipedia.org].
I wouldn't place the word "respect" in the same paragraph as him. This scale of abuse of power doesn't occur by accident.
Re: (Score:2)
I wouldn't place the word "respect" in the same paragraph as him. This scale of abuse of power doesn't occur by accident.
You can still respect the skill of an evil mastermind who pulls something like this off. I definitely think his reputation for being evil in his business dealings is deserved, but I respect the skill and ruthlessness with which he did it. Or maybe "acknowledge" is indeed a better word.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Steve Jobs ain't no polyanna to work for either :P If anything, his fits, rage, pressure, and 'reality warping field' are legendary and well known traits. He alienated people. He rejected people sitting for job interviews because he considered them too square to work at Apple. He was fired from his own company for his behavior, for his mismanagement. He screwed over entire project-teams, even playing them off against each other inside the company. Just go watch "Pirates of Silicon Valley". Gates's claim to
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Arrogance is never earned. It may be what drove him to reach the top, but it still tends to irritate a lot of other people. Before he got his waiver, his reason for violating the San Jose Airport's landing restrictions was essentially "I'm Larry Ellison." He essentially stated that he was above the law.
Gates can be tamed, as shown by Melinda. I've read a couple of articles that suggest that she has helped a great deal to bring out his human side. I don't think Ellison can be brought down off his high h
Re: (Score:2)
Re:How is this news? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
But that article won't clue them in much other that mentioning that he dropped out of Harvard to co-found Microsoft.
No mention there of things like Microsoft's first product MITS Altair BASIC (sold on punchtape for the iconic MITS Altair 8800), or how later Seattle Computer's QDOS was sneakily bought by Microsoft to be renamed as MS-DOS when IBM came knocking for an OS for it's new "IBM PC"...
Re: (Score:2)
Well, the article does mention Jim Braman, but it doesn't mention John Opel [ibm.com], IBM's President, and friend to his mom, Mary Maxwell Gates [sargentportraits.com]. After all, the contract between Microsoft and IBM is what effectively transferred the monopoly between those two companies, so any relationship prior to that deal should be highly relevant to how Bill Gates got his start.
The article also fails to mention that Bill's great-grandfather J. W. Maxwell was the original Founder (then-deceased), that his grandfather James Willar
Re:How is this news? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it's pretty clear that organizations, even big ones, tend to reflect the personalities of their leaders - especially when those leaders have strong personalities. This is very visible with Microsoft, Apple and Google. They're very different companies and I think that's largely down to the way Jobs, Gates and L&S are as people.
Microsoft and Apple are both pretty darn important, and I think Jobs and Gates have pretty darn similar personalities. They both seem to be hyper-aggressive, very controlling A-types who don't think twice about intimidating their "minions". I think that also sums up Microsoft and Apple as companies. So studying Gates can tell us more about the Microsoft of the 90s, which is an interesting topic for anyone in the tech industry.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
He should be taken out back and shot instead of making him out to some 'geek hero', which is is not.
Yeah, he is. Just because you hate him doesn't mean plenty of people don't admire what he's been able to accomplish. I don't always agree with the man's methods, but the fact remains that what he's done is damn impressive.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
He is not an arrogant prick, at least not misplaced arrogance that you see all the time. He is a very powerful man, sure he may have got their by abusing his monopoly, but he had to get there first.